and optimization of business processes, the creation
of new business models in e-commerce and m-
commerce, B2B, B2C, internet security and other
areas, and which support SMEs on the marketplace1.
The category of e-Government is dinfined within
the WSA as addressing projects which help to
empower citizens and serve public services clients,
foseter quality and efficiency of information
exchange and communication services in
governmental and public administrative processes,
and strengthen participation of citizens in
information society decision making
3.1 A Worldwide Networking Effort
The World Summit Award is an Austrian initiative
in the context of the United Nations World Summit
on the Information Society (WSIS). It is an
invitation project and a global activity, rather than an
organization. Started in 2003 for the Geneva Summit
conference, the WSA has been an unprecedented
success due to the strong networking of professional
associations, the national chapters of the Internet
Society, multimedia education and research
institutions, electronic chambers of commerce, non-
governmental groups and foundations, government
offices for IT and Information Society development
and many others.
The WSA is the result of an active engagement
of all these players in WSIS and of the shared
conviction that quality contents are essential for a
quality Information Society. Contents inspire,
inform and allow the exchange of information and
knowledge.
3.2 The Content Gap is Growing
Over the last 50 years, Information and
Communication Technologies have become
exponentially more powerful and radically cheaper
and smaller. E-Content does not keep up with
technology in terms of speed of development,
economies of scale and simplicity of consumption.
This results in a dynamically created structural gap.
This gap is widening as we move on into the
Information Society.
The Content Gap is not just one of technological
versus human capacity. It also has awareness aspects
and results from social and economic structures.
1
The other categories of the WSA include e-Learning, e-Science, e-
Culture, e-Health, e-Entertainment, Special Category: e-Inclusion; for
details see. www.wsis-award.org
There is an imbalance of pay and an inequity of
investment. Post-industrial societies spend enormous
sums of money on equipment, gadgets and ‘tech
things’. They invest far less in quality stories,
knowledge and insight. In the context of the global
economy, it is the content industries which offer the
opportunity for local and regional economic
development. Basic software, hardware and netware
have become global industries with a high degree of
global concentration.
Contents are tied to culture and language. They
are largely local and regional. Most creative
producers – save the ones working for the
Hollywood industries and in English – have
culturally restricted audiences and markets. This
gives countries opportunities to develop
economically. The WSA is strengthening these
opportunities in giving exposure to the best
producers and showing a way for the development
of the content industries.
The Digital Divide adds a further dimension to
the Content Gap. The ‘information poor’ have not
only less or no access to Internet and other digital
platforms. They also get lower quality contents and
applications. The Digital Divide widens the Content
Gap, as info trash clogs the networks and quality
contents move to pay-modes.
The threat of a widening Content Gap runs
counter to the promise of the Information Society.
The capacities of technologies, systems and tools to
generate, distribute and store content increase
exponentially, but content markets are not
transparent or open.
WSA showcases which high-quality contents
exist and thus counteracts oligopolies in the content
sector. It demonstrates the cultural diversity of and
the opportunities for small and medium sized
producers to be successful. In addition, it increases
the capacity of individuals to gain an overview of
what is available on the markets, thus decreasing the
marketing powers of a ‘chosen few’.
3.3 Cultural Richness: Bridging the
Gap
The World Summit Award and this presentation
place their emphasis on cultural diversity and
identity, the creation of varied information content
and the digitalization of educational, scientific and
cultural heritage. These are core issues of a high-
quality Information Society in which people might
be happy to live.
The goal of the WSA is to break the awareness
barrier and the marketing deadlock where big